Tag Archives: history

Restricting Auto Access to Strasbourg’s Pedestrian Zones

An increasingly popular mantra of city planners is “make cities more pedestrian friendly.” During the 25 years I edited the Planning Commissioners that was a topic we often focused on. See: https://plannersweb.com/topics/planning-topics/peds/

While many North American cities have been steadily moving towards this goal (and places like Montreal have done so in a BIG way), European cities, on the whole, seem to be many kilometers ahead.

One method of making cities more pedestrian and bike friendly that has grown in popularity in Europe, especially for cities with large historic districts, is to restrict the access of vehicles in designated areas.

Lila and I first saw this when we spent several days in Montpellier, France, more than ten years ago. Retractable bollards (which can be raised and lowered) are used to block cars and trucks from entering.

There are exceptions carved out for local residents of the area; for deliveries (especially in the early morning); and for essential services like trash collection and access by maintenance contractors. The bollards are retractable in various ways, such as by using a code, card, remote control, or an intercom to call for assistance.

Strasbourg’s aim is to have fewer cars in the historic core, resulting in less noise, reduced exhaust fumes, reduced need for parking spaces, and a calmer environment where people can enjoy each other’s company and their cappuccinos outdoors. This is not a total closure of vehicular access, and there is still parking available, especially for people who live within the controlled area.

What’s more, the city’s extensive tram network plays an important role in keeping visitors’ cars out of the downtown core since it enables visitors to use peripheral parking connected to the tram system to easily access downtown shopping streets and other areas in the centre-ville. See: https://wandertoes.com/strasbourg-tram-step-by-step-guide/

I’m not aware of any North American city having anything on a comparable scale to what Strasbourg does, especially in terms of controlling vehicular access to its center city, while at the same time offering easy transit, bicycle, and pedestrian access to the center city.

In France, cities can determine in which parts of their city vehicle access should be controlled — and to what extent.

The two principal zones that Strasbourg has applied to streets in different parts of its historic core have either been:

Zone piétonne (pedestrian zone) / also referred to as Aire piétonne

* This is the strictest category. * Cars usually prohibited or heavily restricted / bicyclists are allowed, but must go slowly; yield to pedestrians and sometimes walk their bikes. * Delivery/service access only at certain times of day. * Typical of cathedral squares and shopping streets. * This describes much of central Strasbourg.

Zone de rencontre (shared priority zone)

* Middle ground. * Cars can enter, but very slowly; must yield; and cannot dominate the space. * Often used on transition streets near pedestrian cores.

You can see these areas by clicking on the map below to enlarge it.

For any of you wanting a slightly deeper dive, take a look at:

https://www.fub.fr/…/amenagements-types/aire-pietonne

https://www.fub.fr/…/amenagements-types/zone-rencontre

// Also, here’s an excerpt of what the Eurometropolis of Strasbourg has posted on its website about their system (translated from French using Reverso):

“Bicycle & Pedestrian Traffic. The facilities for pedestrians and cyclists give the city of Strasbourg an incomparable charm, much appreciated by tourists but also by locals. To avoid ‘wild and anarchic’ parking, it was necessary to find solutions to filter the cars, to prevent them from reaching certain protected areas without penalizing the residents too much. The Eurometropolis of Strasbourg has a centralized management of access controls based on retractable bollards.”

Francophones: you can read the full explanation in French for yourself at: https://www.strasbourg.eu/circulation-v%C3%A9los-et-pi%C3…

Also please note I’m just becoming familiar with how Strasbourg’s layered approach to prioritizing pedestrian needs works. If you think I got something wrong, let me know.

Stolpersteine Memorial Stones: Remembering those Murdered by the Nazi Regime

Public streets and the buildings that line them have often been used to mark the sites where famous people used to live. I’m including a photo below of a marker in the wall of the building facing our hotel room in Strasbourg, honoring French composer Émile Waldteufel, best known for “The Skater’s Waltz.” Born Charles Émile Levy, he was part of a family of Jewish Alsatian musicians.

A more recent, and quite powerful, example of memorial remembrance markers has been the use in Europe (but especially in Germany and parts of France) of stone markers called Stolpersteine, usually translated as “stumbling stones” or sometimes “stumbling blocks.” Our Road Scholar guide, Amandine Prückner, pointed out two as we were walking in the Petite France section of Strasbourg [on May 12th].

Each “stone” [a brass plate] is placed in the sidewalk in front of the last voluntary residence where a victim of Nazism [aka National Socialism] lived. The Stolpersteine gives the person’s name, and often their dates of birth, deportation, and death.

It is important to note that the Stolpersteine project commemorates many victim groups: Jews, Roma and Sinti, political dissidents, resistance members, disabled victims of “euthanasia” killings, Jehovah’s Witnesses, homosexual victims, and others persecuted by National Socialism.

But the brass plaques themselves don’t mention the individual’s religion, or the reason they were deported.

Certainly, there are family or first names that are typically Jewish, as well as deportation sites, such as Treblinka, Sobibor, and Belzec that were specifically designed by Nazi leaders for the extermination of Jews as a people, and Auschwitz where some 90% of the more than one million individuals murdered there were Jews.

In contrast the Struthof camp (which I’ll return to when I talk about our visit there) included Jewish victims, but primarily served as a brutal forced labor camp and detention center that targeted resistance fighters (especially French) and political opponents of National Socialism.

By coincidence, we had dinner one night in Strasbourg with our Alliance Française friends Steve and Deborah, and my brother Rob and his wife Pat at L’Oignon, an excellent Alsatian restaurant.

The building in which L’Oignon is located, at 4 rue des Moulins, had been the home of the Daniels family: Chaïm (father); Perle (mother); and their children Arnold, Erna, and Régine (who were respectively 14, 13, and 7 years old when killed at Auschwitz in 1943).

The five Daniels family members are now memorialized by Stolpersteine markers in front of L’Oignon. It is unsettling to think we had such an enjoyable meal where the Daniels family had once lived.

Stolpersteine markers have become especially common in German cities and towns, as well as in parts of France and more than thirty other countries. As of August 2024, the Stolpersteine project has placed over 107,000 stones in almost 1,900 municipalities, including 92 stones (as of today) in Strasbourg.

The Stolpersteine serve as reminders of evil occurring amid everyday life. But we would also encounter more evidence of evil a couple of days later when we visited the Struthof Concentration Camp set in the beautiful Vosges Mountains — which I’ll discuss later.

To learn more about the remarkable Stolpersteine project and its creator Gunter Demnig, go to their website — you’ll find a wealth of information there: https://www.stolpersteine.eu/en

See a list with of each of the Strasbourg victims now memorialized by Stolpersteine (as of today — May 31, 2026 — 92 stones at 42 addresses): https://de.wikipedia.org/…/Liste_der_Stolpersteine_in…

For photos of each of the Daniels family members: https://www.stolpersteine.lautre.net/…/famille-daniel…/

Volunteer members of the organization Stolpersteine 67 polish and help maintain the stone markers: https://www.stolpersteine.lautre.net/wp/actualites/